We’ve touched on many of the macroeconomic factors impacting the luxury market – currency swings, travel patterns, security issues, among many others. But one that hasn’t gotten a lot of attention is the price of oil. Over the last few decades, luxury spending in oil-rich nations like Saudia Arabia and the UAE has been pivotal to global revenue growth. But in troubling news for the industry, the price of oil is down – that means sales are too. The price of crude has fallen over 50% since 2014. This slump has consequences for all of the biggest names. Hermes CEO Axel Dumas was blunt in his comments to Bloomberg: “We’ve experienced a fairly strong drop in traffic in the Middle East.”

@byaliaa

Middle-East luxury sales growth was stagnant in 2015 after growing 4% in 2014, and a fifth of respondents in a recent Bain survey of Persian Gulf countries said they deliberately cut luxury spending. According to Global Blue, duty free spending by shoppers from the UAE, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait was flat in March after growing for seven straight months. This is bad news for an industry already struggling in critical regions like Europe and China. There was some expectation that the declining euro would make shopping abroad more attractive for Middle East tourists, but retailers aren’t seeing the type of boost they expected.

Luxury Shopping in Doha, Qatar

Are you in one of these countries? What are you seeing on the ground? Are the stores less full than in years previous? Join the conversation on BopTalk.

Read related articles below:
Luxury 2016: The Year of Struggle
Luxury Market Expected to Bottom Out This Year
China Woes Weigh Heavy on Luxury Market
Luxury Market Expects Weakest Year Since Lehman Crash
The Luxury Market after the Paris Attacks?
Global Price Implications on Chanel Street
Why Western Luxury Retailers Should Still Be Looking East

Love PurseBop
XO

@pursebop visits the Gold Souk market in Dubai, Dec 2015.

Luxury Market Expected to Bottom Out This Year, read more here. @gorgeous_daily_dose